The Unbearable Lightness of BIA-ing

In an average year, the  Board of Immigration Appeals decides over 35,000 cases, but publishes less than 40 decisions.  The small number of published decisions provides insufficient guidance to the nation’s Immigration Judges and results in inconsistent rulings between judges.  The lack of guidance has also contributed to the dramatic increase in immigration cases heard by the federal courts of appeals.  So instead of the law being settled by the BIA–which specializes in immigration–the various appeals courts have been interpreting the law, not always consistent with their sister circuits.

Here is how the numbers break down for the last few years: In 2009, the BIA decided 33,103 cases and published 34 decisions.  In 2008, it decided 38,369 cases and published 33 decisions.  In 2007, it decided 35,394 cases with 45 published decisions, and in 2006, it decided 41,476 cases and published 26 decisions.  So far this year, the Board has published 31 decisions.

Maybe Harry Truman could lend the BIA his famous sign.

When I was at the AILA conference last summer, we heard that published decisions require far more time and resources than unpublished decisions, but I just don’t buy it.  The BIA is authorized to have up to 15 Board Members.  It has a staff of well over 100 attorneys.  So even during their most prolific year (2007, when they published 45 decisions), each Board Member was required to write only three decisions, and each staff attorney wrote less than half of one decision.   

According to the BIA Practice Manual:

Decisions selected for publication meet one or more of several criteria, including but not limited to: the resolution of an issue of first impression; alteration, modification, or clarification of an existing rule of law; reaffirmation of an existing rule of law; resolution of a conflict of authority; and discussion of an issue of significant public interest.

It’s hard to believe that of the 30 to 40 thousand cases the Board reviews each year, only about 0.1% (one in one thousand) contain an issue that meets the above criteria.  I’ve had several cases before the BIA that involved issues of first impression, none of which were published (though two of them were published decisions by federal circuit courts).  Why is the Board passing the buck on decisions to the federal courts of appeals?

Although it might be more work over the short term, if the Board published more frequently, IJ decisions would become more consistent–creating less work for the BIA over the long term.  It would also make life easier for the federal courts of appeals, saving government resources.  Finally–and most important from my point of view–it would create more certainty and predictability for immigrants and their families. 

The BIA should embrace its role as “the highest administrative body for interpreting and applying immigration laws” and publish more decisions.

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9 comments

  1. […] back in 2010, I did a blog post about the Board of Immigration Appeals, where I complained that the Board issues too few decision […]

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  2. […] only about one case out of every 1,000 (I wrote about this problem in a blog post called, The Unbearable Lightness of BIA-ing). If the Board could publish more cases, it would provide better guidance to the nation’s […]

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  3. […] tasked with interpreting the immigration law–has failed to provide much useful guidance (as usual). And so the buck has been passed to the various federal circuit […]

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  4. […] BIA decisions is to look at the reversal rates for those decisions.  To me–and this is an issue I’ve harped on before–one relatively easy way to reduce reversal rates is to provide […]

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  5. […] document.getElementById("fb-root").appendChild(e); }()); I periodically complain about the ongoing failure of the Board of Immigration Appeals to provide guidance to Immigration […]

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  6. […] indefinite detention on asylum seekers in the UK. That post drew a comment from Francis Schwartz on The Asylumist about detention in the US, where the practice of immigrant detention, including asylum seekers, […]

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  7. More troubling is that in the post 9/11 environment, governments use extended detention intentionally. From the Asylum-Network:
    http://asylum-network.com/2010/11/18/human-rights-denied-indefinite-immgiration-detention/#comment-13

    I went to a really inspiring workshop the other day, run by the London School of Economics (LSE) migration studies unit. It was discussing the way indefinite immigration detention is used in the UK including its increasing use and its serious mental health consequences. Jerome Phelps has done so much to help through his organisation, London Detainee Support Group, and Alison Harvey’s talk was also really clear and very useful. Helen Bamber desribed the current use of indefinite immigration detention in the UK as ‘sinister’. It certainly puts the debate about 28 days of locking up terror suspects without charge into perspective. To learn more check out the London Detainees Support Group website at http://www.ldsg.org.uk/files/modules/content/?id=1

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  8. […] The Unbearable Lightness of BIA-ing — Josh Dzubow argues that with the Board of Immigration Appeals only publishing a handful of precedential decisions each year (e.g. in 2009, 34 published decisions from 33,103 cases), there are merits to having the BIA publish more decisions as precedent. Although it might be more work over the short term, if the Board published more frequently, IJ decisions would become more consistent–creating less work for the BIA over the long term. It would also make life easier for the federal courts of appeals, saving government resources. Finally–and most important from my point of view–it would create more certainty and predictability for immigrants and their families. […]

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  9. I agree with you 100%. The situation won’t get better unless the immigration system is reformed. On a personal level, dealing with the BIA is so incredibly difficult. For the vast majority of immigration clients, paying for a BIA appeal is difficult, at best – and their ability to pay for a higher appeal is even less. But when you have what I call “Sleeping Justice” at the BIA level, the chances of prevailing at the BIA level is slim. This means, of course, immigrants have to take the case to the higher court. In my view, when the BIA rules were streamlined, this was part of a political strategy to essentially reduce, if not eliminate, the appellate rights of immigrants.

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